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A systematic review of the use of dietary self-monitoring in behavioural weight loss interventions: delivery, intensity and effectiveness

Margaret Raber, Yue Liao, Anne Rara, Susan M Schembre, Kate J Krause, Larkin Strong, Carrie Daniel-MacDougall, Karen Basen-Engquist

2021Public Health Nutrition38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify dietary self-monitoring implementation strategies in behavioural weight loss interventions. DESIGN: We conducted a systematic review of eight databases and examined fifty-nine weight loss intervention studies targeting adults with overweight/obesity that used dietary self-monitoring. SETTING: NA. PARTICIPANTS: NA. RESULTS: We identified self-monitoring implementation characteristics, effectiveness of interventions in supporting weight loss and examined weight loss outcomes among higher and lower intensity dietary self-monitoring protocols. Included studies utilised diverse self-monitoring formats (paper, website, mobile app, phone) and intensity levels (recording all intake or only certain aspects of diet). We found the majority of studies using high- and low-intensity self-monitoring strategies demonstrated statistically significant weight loss in intervention groups compared with control groups. CONCLUSIONS: Based on our findings, lower and higher intensity dietary self-monitoring may support weight loss, but variability in adherence measures and limited analysis of weight loss relative to self-monitoring usage limits our understanding of how these methods compare with each other.

Topics & Concepts

Weight lossIntensity (physics)MedicineBody weightEnvironmental healthAnimal scienceObesityStatisticsFeeding behaviorPopulationMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsDigital Mental Health InterventionsInnovative Human-Technology Interaction
A systematic review of the use of dietary self-monitoring in behavioural weight loss interventions: delivery, intensity and effectiveness | Litcius